Abstract

Trophic niche breadth and niche overlap of bees were studied in a region of Caatinga (a deciduous dry thorn scrub forest) in Brazil with the lowest mean annual rainfall of the country, highly seasonal environmental variation, and an unpredictable rainy season. A null model approach was used to determine if the observed niche overlap in the community differed from that expected by chance. In general, even bee species with wider trophic niches concentrated foraging efforts on flowers of only a few of the available plant species, with low trophic niche overlap between pairs of species and among all species in the community. A randomization test showed niche overlap among the 10 common species in the guild to be significantly less than expected by chance, suggesting the existence of functional complementarity. The structure of communities defined by high functional complementarity is likely to be more sensitive to variation in available resources (e.g., richness and abundance of floral resources for bees). Ecosystem services provided by such communities may be more greatly affected by environmental changes (anthropogenic activities and climate change) than are services provided by communities with greater functional redundancy.

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